srijeda, 28. prosinca 2016.

What's English for "Muljanje"? (by Zeljko CVIJANOVIC, Dani, Sarajevo, Federation Bosnia-Hercegovina, B-H, November 10, 2000) - full, English

Translated on November 8, 2000

SDS Ban

What's English for "Muljanje"?

The pile of foreign aid hasn't improved the life in the Republic of Srpska (RS) a whole lot, all democratic norms advocated by the foreigners have been violated in RS by their favorite Dodik since, my God, he is on his own and on the other side are the SDS, Milosevic, Alister Crowley and the rest of evil in this world. When they allowed Dodik to rule in spite of a lack of majority support in the Parliament, the foreigners actually very hypocritically avoided the responsibility for, if they do not want the SDS, compromised by its behavior in the war, proclaiming a full protectorate in RS and taking the responsibility for their actions
by Zeljko CVIJANOVIC

Dani, Sarajevo, Federation Bosnia-Hercegovina, B-H, November 10, 2000

The worst of all the mistakes foreigners have made in the Republic of Srpska in the last three years was published a week before the elections under the headline War Criminals in RS: Do You Know Your Neighbors? Why? Because, by putting forward the demand for the ban of the SDS, the political party most likely to win the elections in RS, they tried not only to influence the election results but again did a favor to all those among Serbs, Croats, and Bosniaks who claim that the international investigation of war crimes has above all a political role, rather than a legal, moral or historical role.
Everything started about a month ago when Milorad Dodik's headquarters leaked that Richard Holbrooke was coming to Bosnia and that he was going to destroy the SDS. "I will be the president of RS, because the Americans want that," self-confident Dodik said at the time. Somewhat later, discussing his chances in the elections, Dodik concluded: "I have already won." About ten days before Holbrooke's arrival, foreign diplomats in Sarajevo and Banja Luka received a report of the International Crisis Group (ICG) that demands that the SDS be banned because that party is still maintaining links with Radovan Karadzic and because its wartime officials, involved in crimes, are still active in government and parallel structures that control the illegal flows of crimes and politics. According to James Lyon, the chief of that ICG project, the report is the result of seven months of investigation in the field in 18 municipalities in Bosnia-Hercegovina (BH) and lists names of 75 politicians who were allegedly involved in war crimes under the auspices of the SDS.
Then Holbrooke arrived and in an exceptionally (even for the RS media) servile and obsequious interview published in Banja Luka weekly Nezavisne Novine stated that "the SDS is a criminal organization and it should be disbanded. Many war criminals are free and some of them are even in the local government as, for example, in Bratunac." This was Holbrooke's message from his Balkans tour. He was above all referring to Milan Deronjic, one of the leaders of the SDS in Bratunac who, after the unprecedented crime against Bosniaks in July 1995, was appointed the representative of that party for Srebrenica.
Who are the people from the ICG list?: Milan Deronjic and the remaining 74 names mentioned in the ICG report are actually the extended version of the list of the RS Defense Ministry, published in Banja Luka weekly Reporter two months ago. "Our investigation showed that that document was planted by Dodik and an official of his intelligence-security service," was the belated wisdom demonstrated by one of the officials in the RS Defense Ministry who commented on the ICG list for Dani. And really, the company on the list is far from pleasant. Besides already mentioned Deronjic, there is Vojkan Durkovic, Arkan's wartime representative in Bijeljina better known as Major Vojkan, whose chief business venture was the trade with Bosniaks from Bijeljina; then there is Milan Ninkovic a former RS defense minister, a Doboj warlord and founder of the paramilitary organization "Mice", which became infamous because of its crimes; the list also includes the trio from Foca, Velibor Ostojic, Petko Cancar, and Vojislav Maksimovic; then Bozidar Vucurovic, who in the summer of 1992 ordered deportation of Bosniaks from eastern Hercegovina; Milan Lukic, perhaps the worst murderer from the war in BH and as of last week officially a war-crimes suspect with an indictment in the Hague...
Of course, it is difficult to defend the wartime role of most of the people from that list. However, the ICG list does not include any of the currently influential SDS politicians, apart form Milan Tupajic, the chief of the SDS group of deputies in the RS Parliament, Milovan Bjelica, one of Sarajevo-Romanija kings of war profiteering and Momcilo Krajisnik's accountant, and Ninkovic, the SDS official with probably the most credit for preventing Biljana Plavsic's virus form spreading east from Doboj.
On the other hand, Biljana Plavsic's Serb People's Party (SNS) is far better represented on the ICG list. Besides Plavsic, the list mentions Petko Cancar, a former Minister of Justice in Dodik's government, Drago Ljubicic, a SNS deputy in the BH Parliament, and Rajko Dukic, the powerful lord of Birac and the chief financial supporter of the SNS. Dukic even admitted that a ban of the SDS for the reasons advocated by the ICG "would imply the ban of a few more parties". "The ultimate goal of such proposals is to say that RS was established by terrorist and banned parties, and bring into question its existence as an entity within BH," says Dukic.
Even Lyon does not see anything paranoid in Dukic's analysis: "In RS they cannot admit crimes because that would reveal the foundations on which the entity was built and simply destroy their concept," he says accusing RS of lack of cooperation with the Hague Tribunal for war crimes.
Cooperation With The Hague: Of course, that brings up three questions. First, war crimes and the Hague; second whether the SDS has, as it claims, reformed itself; and third, what is the motivation and true goals of the demands for the ban of the SDS? When he accuses SFOR of lack of enthusiasm for arrests of war-crimes suspects, or when he assesses that RS does not cooperate with the Tribunal and that it is not even discussing the crimes, Lyon forgets several things. Above all, why should SFOR even need to arrest war-crimes suspects in RS, when RS has a government that is, to say the least, considered to be friendly and cooperative by the foreigners?
Secondly, it is not true that the government does not cooperate with the Hague Tribunal, but that cooperation is not transparent and legally regulated, so that it merely affirms an underground paralegal set of relations. For example, three years ago the RS Government, in cooperation with the Belgrade secret police, managed to extradite to the Hague Tribunal three war-crimes suspects from Samac. Then, didn't the RS Government let SFOR in the Banja Luka prison Tunjica to pick up Zoran Zigic, who was serving a sentence for a murder? Doesn't Dodik's triumphant proclamation after one of the visits to the Hague Tribunal that he was promised that members of his cabinet would not be arrested as long as they are in the Government, constitute a form of cooperation? It would be cooperation only if Carla del Ponte demanded from Ivica Racan to put a banana peel in front of some of Croatian generals so that they can accidentally slide all the way to Scheweningen without spoiling his chances in the elections. Or if they asked Vojislav Kostunica to tell Mira Markovic that she would be inducted in the Dutch Academy of Sciences and Arts if she convinced her husband to turn himself in.
Of course, that is not real cooperation, but illegal muljanje [messing around]. The true cooperation would be reflected in the adoption of a law that specified the institutional relationship between RS and the Hague Tribunal. A proposal of such a law, according to which the RS Police and local courts would be obliged to arrest and extradite suspects, was put together by a former minister of justice in Dodik's government, Milan Trbojevic, a year ago. But the law never made it to the RS Parliament, and the Hague tolerated that and continued to mess around lest it harmed Dodik's chances in the elections. And all of that took place in RS, which since September 1996 has been either in the pre-election phase or a fragile phase of post-election stabilization of the government. And what happened? Foreigners, praise the truth, did not harm Dodik's chances, but he can today beat the SDS candidate only by cheating on a big scale or appearing on the TV screens after the elections and addressing the citizens with: "Hello, my name is Mirko Sarovic [the SDS candidate for the president of RS]."
Has SDS been reformed? Therefore, it is not difficult to agree with Lyon, but the question is whether it is worth arranging the election results in advance and excluding the SDS only to have Dodik opt for "cooperative lack of cooperation" until year 2002 until he stabilizes his government, and then go on in the same manner until year 2004, this time in the pre-election phase. On the other hand, as far as the media in RS are concerned, apart from several microphones hanging from a tree that like to ambitiously refer to themselves as local radio stations, all media in RS are controlled either by Dodik or the foreigners. During all this time these media informed us that the Ferhadija Mosque [in Banja Luka] could not be built until the collected documentation and bricks needed for the reconstruction reach the ratio of 1 to 1, or that RS was represented at the commemoration in Srebrenica by Thomas Miller [U.S. ambassador in BH].
The second question is whether the SDS has been reformed. This is not an answer [sic]. Ever since the SDS has existed, Holbrooke and the ICG never had less reason to accuse that party. When Dodik was busy with Holbrooke's ban of the SDS, he said that "it may not even be democratic". "If the SDS wins, all international economic relations with RS will be severed," explained Dodik contributing to unprecedented low-class rhetoric of the sort "either me or destruction", only comparable to "Self-determination of extermination" [slogan used on HDZ posters], and "Vote for your kind" [SDA slogan].
Unlike Dodik, who in the ban of the SDS sees his only chance to remain in power, that political party very meekly reacted to the accusations. Convinced that he and the SDS will win the elections, Sarovic said for the people on the ICG list that he did not think "that they were members of the party" and that the SDS is not any more the party that Holbrooke knew a few years ago and that its leadership consists of young and flexible politicians. Mirko Banjac, a SDS official, was even more explicit. He said that he did not expect any sanctions but also that "we are not stubborn". "The SDS is prepared for a reasonable discussion of mistakes made by some people in the past or any mistakes made in the future," said Banjac and demonstrated that the SDS did not want to spoil its chances of an election victory with a debate with the international community. Indeed, the SDS ran a very meek campaign, in which it mostly criticized Dodik's wasted economic policy, while the pinnacle of their "patriotic" statements was reached by requests "for special links with FR Yugoslavia, all according to the Dayton Agreement".
Such things should not be neglected, but they do not reveal whether the SDS has truly been reformed. Even its leaders cannot answer that question, about a political party that hasn't been deciding about anything for more than three years, with many arguments. But the reply will quickly come. If the SDS wins enough votes to form a government with Ivanic (since the foreigners will not allow them to form a government on their own), it will have to answer several test questions, the first one of which will be the Hague Tribunal. But, not the cooperation with the Hague Tribunal in the manner proposed to Dodik (for example, an incidental forest fire in all of the eastern RS that would somehow catapult Radovan Karadzic in the guise of a burning pine cone all the way to the Hague). Rather, a legal basis of the cooperation including a law passed by the Parliament. There are reasons to believe that this dilemma could lead to a breakup of the SDS, but neither of the groups would include more than three persons mentioned in the IGC list.
Why do foreigners like Mafia style democracy? Petritsch and Barry advocate such a course of action. The IGC and Holbrooke have humiliated both them and their capability to assess and verify the candidates for office with their mistrust. Besides, those who propose a SDS ban do not bear responsibility for the future events. They come and go, while Petritsch and Barry would be left behind to struggle with chaos on the political scene.
The last problem related to the SDS ban is the role of foreigners in RS during the last two years. The pile of foreign aid hasn't improved the life in RS a whole lot, all democratic norms advocated by the foreigners have been violated in RS by their favorite Dodik since, my God, he is on his own and on the other side are the SDS, Milosevic, Alister Crowley and the rest of evil in this world. When they allowed Dodik to rule in spite of a lack of majority support in the Parliament, the foreigners actually very hypocritically avoided the responsibility for, if they do not want the SDS, compromised by its behavior in the war, proclaiming a full protectorate in RS and taking the responsibility for their actions. But, believes Lyon, the SDS should be blamed for everything. No matter how much one tries, that does not make sense. The amount wasted on the democratic project Dodik could have been used to cover all of BH with a network of non-governmental organizations promoting democratic principles.
But, the foreigners did not need democracy in RS. They needed Dodik, who was supposed to clean up the scene, destroy the SDS and nationalism, carry out economic reforms... And what has he done? He destroyed at least two political parties stronger than his own, that tried to organize in RS something that would differ from the former SDS one-party democracy, he took control of most media outlets that conduct his election campaign using the democratic lessons learned from venerable Enver Hoxha [Albanian communist dictator]; he destroyed the Parliament and degraded the political discourse to the level of the market talk in his hometown Laktasi; he has reformed the economy in such a manner that for more than two years blue collar workers, pensioners and state employees have been coming out in front of the government buildings in large numbers to thank him, although it is not clear why they have been doing that by cursing his mother. He has done everything but cured the society of nationalism. On the contrary, whenever he needed voter's support he switched to the nationalist discourse. And he hasn't destroyed the SDS, so that the worst nationalists in RS see their relationship with Dodik as that between a tragedy and a farce.
When on the eve of the elections the foreigners realized that their project Dodik has fallen through, it was expected that, after his possible departure from power, they would be forced to for a few months listen to what the naughty boy has done playing the Prime Minister, how much he spent, how much he lost on the way home, how he made illegal Balkan-style personal deals with certain foreign officials signing secret documents, lying to the Parliament and the public. Namely, the Mafia style nationalism has become a mold for the society, both destructive and a logical outcome of Dodik's actions. Mafia style democracy is not only destructive, is it the best way to totally discredit democracy.

Naturally, that least resistance approach backfired against foreigners, Dodik, and Serbs. What now? The suspect SDS will win and instead of Dodik it will most likely face uncompromised Zlatko Lagumdzija. Of course, that dualism, according to which the citizens of RS will have to pick between brain cancer (SDS) and lung cancer (Dodik) is not the domestic invention, but a gift from abroad. Similarly, Ivanic will have to make the same choice after the elections. The question is, of course, absurd, but Lyon thinks that it makes sense to give an answer. The problem is that his answer will be harmful to Bosnia, RS, and Dodik, and potentially useful for a foreigner or two who is convinced that in the election race in RS the solution is to kill all the good horses to ensure the victory of an old and decrepit horse, into which so much money has been invested. 

DOCUMENT ABOUT HYPOCRISY (Reporter, Banja Luka, Srpska, B-H, September 13, 2000)

Translated by S. Lazovic (September 5, 2000)

DOCUMENT ABOUT HYPOCRISY

Reporter, Banja Luka, Srpska, B-H, September 13, 2000

Last week, in the issue 124, Reporter published a confidential document of the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Srpska (RS), with a list of 74 persons who, according to the predictions and analysis conducted by the Ministry, are candidates for the Hague.
A lot of people with unclean conscience or, simply people who do not know how to think or watch, hurried to denounce the document as a fake.
Mirko Sarovic, the presidential candidate of the Serb Democratic Party (SDS), demanded an investigation against Reporter; Rajko Latinovic, an official of the Party of Democratic Progress (PDP), mumbled something about manipulation and disturbing of the families; Ms. Lolic-Mocevic from the Serb People's Party (SNS) screeched that there are no Bosniaks and Croats on the list; minister of justice Cedo Vrzina clumsily distanced himself from the list; he claims that he hasn't seen the list, but he is sure that it did not originate in the Hague...
Very little logic, a lot of lies, inconsistency, mistakes, lack of honesty and mumbling merge into common hypocrisy which, instead of talking about the list of the RS Defense Ministry, with imputations, with wholehearted assistance of the state propaganda [news] agency, attempts to create the impression in the public opinion that Reporter is the creator of the published list.
By publishing the document, regardless of some illogical errors in it, Reporter proved one more thing: lists do exist, suspects as well, and state institutions are aware of likely suspects.
By publishing the document, Reporter proved another thing: State institutions are not doing anything in connection with the lists.
Politicians who are supposed to be campaigning are striving to prove a third thing: in the name of peace in the families and in the name of national reciprocity, they will not do anything in connection with crimes.
The whole circulation of Reporter's previous issue was sold out in literally two and a half days, indicating that our citizens want to cleanse themselves from crimes and separate themselves from criminals.
The state, rather than investigators from the Hague, is obliged to free its citizens from collective guilt, to give chance to some of the suspects to prove their innocence, and to try those who are guilty of crimes.
Trying to satisfy the curiosity of many of our readers who did not manage to buy the last issue, Reporter in this issue again publishes the list of candidates for the Hague compiled by the RS Defense Ministry.
In some cases the author of this compilation did not know the exact names of the suspects so he provided options for names and surnames, and in some cases he did not know the full names of the suspects.

S (sealed list) P (public list)

THE LIST:

Bratunac:
Miroslav Deronjic (Demonjic) (Sealed) Miodrag Josipovic (S) Momir Nikolic (S) Zoran Tomic aka Gagija (S) Simic (S)
Zvornik:
Dragomir Vasic (S)

Milici-Vlasenica:
Rajko Dukic (S)

Srebrenica:
Cvjetinovic (Cvijetinovic) (S)

Rogatica:
Sokolovic (S) Kušic (S)

Foca:
Velibor Ostojic (S) Vojo Maksimovic (S) Petko Cancar (S) Gojko Jankovic (P) Janko Janjic (P) Dragan Zelenovic (P) Radovan Stankovic (P)

Bijeljina:
Vlado Vrkes (S)

Brcko:
Nedeljko Rasina (S) Rajko Mesic (Nesic) (S)

Prijedor:
Mirko Vrucinic (S) Branko Basara (S) Miodrag Pristana (S) Slobodan Kuruzovic (Trnopolje) (S) Simo Miskovic (S) Dalibor Mrdja aka Dado (S) Milomir Stakic (S) Goran Borovica (P) Ranko Mijic (MUP) (S) Zivko Jovic (MUP) (S) Grozdan Mutic (RDB) (S) Zeljko Meakic (P) Momcilo Gruban (P) Nenad i Predrag Banovic (P) Dusan Knezevic aka Duca (P)

Banjaluka:
Drago Bojanic (S) Jovo Rosic (S) Stojan Zupljanin (S) Vojo Kupresanin (S) Radoslav Vukic (S) Rajko Kasagic (S)

Sanski Most:
Batovic (Bapovic) (S)

Doboj:
Milan Ninkovic (S) Milovan Stankovic (S) Dusko Zivkovic (S) Andrija Bjelosevic (S) Miko (Miki)

Teslic:
Nikola Terzic (S) Savo Knezevic (S)

Hercegovina:
Krsto Savic (S) Bozo Vucurevic (S) Tomo Kovac (S) Dusan Jankovic (S) Sredoje Lukic (S) Niko Vujacic (S) Vojko Vuckovic (S)

Pale:
Radomir Kojic (S) Branko Simic (S) Radomir Krstovic (SAO Romanija) (S) Trifko Radic (S) Nedeljko Prstojevic (S) M. Bjelica (S)

Visegrad:
Milan Lukic (S)

LIST OF PEOPLE WHERE THE REGION WHERE THEY BELONG IS NOT GIVEN: Nenad Banovac (S) Momo Bosiljcic (S) Arsenije Grahovac (S) Aleksa Popovic (S) Pejovic (S) Zivkovic (S) Milan Kovacevic (S)
Reporter also publishes a list of 35 Bosniaks suspected by the Hague Tribunal of being responsible for crimes against Serbs. Naturally, we are not doing this to satisfy the hypocrisy and base instincts of politicians and candidates for the state officials.

List 35

Secret lists of the Hague Tribunal include 35 Bosniaks suspected of committing war crimes against Serbs during the war in Bosnia-Hercegovina (BH). Reporter obtained this information from a highly placed source from the security forces.
This list has been passed on to the editors of other publications in BH, but no one was prepared to publish it, according to our source, because by its very existence it provokes the publication of lists with Serb names.
"The Tribunal has during the last few months been intensively investigating crimes committed against Serbs in camps 'Silos' in Tarcin, 'Krupa', 'Igman', and 'Hrasnica' near Sarajevo, as well as participation of the highest Bosniak officials in these crimes," says our source and adds that the objects of the investigation are the current president of the BH Presidency Alija Izetbegovic and Atif Dudakovic, the former commander of the Fifth Corps of the BH Army".
He further says that he does not believe that Izetbegovic will ever be indicted, but that the current president of the FBH, Ejup Ganic, has definitely been secretly indicted. "It is believed that he bears the most responsibility for the crimes committed in the mentioned camps."
Further he claims that the following highest officers of the BH Army are war crimes suspects:
Rasim Delic
Vahid Karavelic
Nedzad Ajnahodzic
Fikret Pljevljak
Sefer Halilovic

Police:
Enver Dupovac
Muhamed Turcinovic
Refik Tufo
Mirsad Sabic
Nezir Fiso
Avdo Mujan
Milan Bozic
Salko Gosto

From "Silos":
Becir Hujic
Serif Mesanovic
Halic Covic

Petty Military Officers
Nezir Kozic
Nermin Semsic
Mensur Covic
Zulfikar Alispago
Vahid Aladuz

From "Hrasnica":
Zijo Gogic
Others:
Nermin Kalember
Said Likovac
Emir Oputa
Ibro Fiso
Hazur Hajruli
Muhamed Cicko
Hidajet Sabic
Adem Jahic
Suljo Fiso
Faruk Saric
Amira Horman
Nedzad Hodzic


List of Candidates for the Hague Tribunal from Srpska, Reporter, September 6, 2000

LIST OF THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA CANDIDATES FOR THE TRIBUNAL (Reporter, September 6, 2000)

http://www.ex-yupress.com/reporter/reporter66.html

The Hague

LIST OF THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA CANDIDATES FOR THE TRIBUNAL

Reporter, Banja Luka, Srpska, B-H, September 6, 2000

"Reporter" has acquired a list of people from the Republic of Srpska (RS) in whom the Hague tribunal has an interest. The list was created by the RS ministry of defense on the basis of its analysis.
The ministry of defense of Republika Srpska has created a list of people suspected of having committed war crimes in BH against whom the Hague tribunal has issued sealed indictments.
In a memorandum from the ministry dated August 16 of this year, which "Reporter" has acquired, it is stated that this ministry received a list by location of those in whom the Hague tribunal has an interest. The memo goes on to say that some of people are wanted under public indictments while the others "are probably wanted under sealed indictments".
"The list of names allegedly originated from Goran Neskovic, an attorney from Doboj," it is said in the memo.
The document also states that the chief prosecutor of the Hague tribunal will visit Banja Luka on September 25 and "at that time, most probably, she will demand that the RS government arrest and sentence people under public indictments".
"In general, the Hague tribunal believes and assesses that the RS is still a safe place for war criminals," it is said in the document of the ministry which is signed by the deputy minister, Grujo Boric.
One copy each of this memo was submitted to the RS minister of internal affairs, Sredoje Novic, and the chief of staff of the RS Army (VRS) General Staff, General Novica Simic.
It is mentioned in a footnote that Carla del Ponte during her stay in Banja Luka will request the arrest of two senior RS officials but the names of these officials are not given.
In some places the author of this unique list did not know the exact names of the suspects and provided other variants of first and last names, and in other places he did not know the full names of the suspects.

S (sealed list) P (public list)

THE LIST:

Bratunac:
Miroslav Deronjic (Demonjic) (Sealed) Miodrag Josipovic (S) Momir Nikolic (S) Zoran Tomic aka Gagija (S) Simic (S)
Zvornik:
Dragomir Vasic (S)

Milici-Vlasenica:
Rajko Dukic (S)

Srebrenica:
Cvjetinovic (Cvijetinovic) (S)

Rogatica:
Sokolovic (S) Kušic (S)

Foca:
Velibor Ostojic (S) Vojo Maksimovic (S) Petko Cancar (S) Gojko Jankovic (P) Janko Janjic (P) Dragan Zelenovic (P) Radovan Stankovic (P)

Bijeljina:
Vlado Vrkes (S)

Brcko:
Nedeljko Rasina (S) Rajko Mesic (Nesic) (S)

Prijedor:
Mirko Vrucinic (S) Branko Basara (S) Miodrag Pristana (S) Slobodan Kuruzovic (Trnopolje) (S) Simo Miskovic (S) Dalibor Mrdja aka Dado (S) Milomir Stakic (S) Goran Borovica (P) Ranko Mijic (MUP) (S) Zivko Jovic (MUP) (S) Grozdan Mutic (RDB) (S) Zeljko Meakic (P) Momcilo Gruban (P) Nenad i Predrag Banovic (P) Dusan Knezevic aka Duca (P)

Banjaluka:
Drago Bojanic (S) Jovo Rosic (S) Stojan Zupljanin (S) Vojo Kupresanin (S) Radoslav Vukic (S) Rajko Kasagic (S)

Sanski Most:
Batovic (Bapovic) (S)

Doboj:
Milan Ninkovic (S) Milovan Stankovic (S) Dusko Zivkovic (S) Andrija Bjelosevic (S) Miko (Miki)

Teslic:
Nikola Terzic (S) Savo Knezevic (S)

Hercegovina:
Krsto Savic (S) Bozo Vucurevic (S) Tomo Kovac (S) Dusan Jankovic (S) Sredoje Lukic (S) Niko Vujacic (S) Vojko Vuckovic (S)

Pale:
Radomir Kojic (S) Branko Simic (S) Radomir Krstovic (SAO Romanija) (S) Trifko Radic (S) Nedeljko Prstojevic (S) M. Bjelica (S)

Visegrad:
Milan Lukic (S)

LIST OF PEOPLE WHERE THE REGION WHERE THEY BELONG IS NOT GIVEN: Nenad Banovac (S) Momo Bosiljcic (S) Arsenije Grahovac (S) Aleksa Popovic (S) Pejovic (S) Zivkovic (S) Milan Kovacevic (S)
Also on the list are the names of one Bosniak and three Croats:
Naser Oric (for Kravice, Bugojno, Kazane) (S) Stupni Do: Ivica Rajic (S), Zoran Marinic (S)

Mostar: Ante Buhovac (S) 

Lyon (ICG) accusing RS that it does not cooperate with the ICTY (Sarajevo based DANI, 10/11/200

http://www.bhdani.com/arhiva/180/t18015.shtml
Zeljko Cvijanovic, Dani 180, Kako se na engleskom kaže muljanje?, 10.11.2000

Sa druge strane, na spisku ICG-a u mnogo reprezentativnijem sastavu zastupljen je Plavšićkin SNS, odakle se, osim nje, pominju Petko Èanèar, bivši ministar pravde u Dodikovoj vladi, Drago Ljubièiæ, poslanik SNS-a u Parlamentarnoj skupštini BiH, te Rajko Dukić, moćni gospodar Birča i glavi finansijer SNS-a. Dukić je čak priznao da bi zabrana SDS-a iz razloga koje prezentuje ICG "povukla zabranu rada i nekih drugih stranaka". "To ide cilju koji govori da je RS stvorena od terorističkih, zabranjenih stranaka, i samim tim dovodi u pitanje RS i njenu egzistenciju kao entiteta u BiH", kaže Dukić.
Ni Lyon u Dukićevoj analizi ne vidi ništa paranoièno. "U RS-u ne mogu ni priznati zločine, jer bi se tada ogolili temelji na kojima je entitet stvoren, naprosto, srušila bi im se koncepcija", kaže on optužujući RS da ne sarađuje sa Sudom za ratne zločine.
Saradnja sa Haagom Naravno, tu se otvaraju tri pitanja: prvo, ratni zločini i Haag; drugo, da li se SDS, kako tvrdi, reformisala ili njom još upravljaju ratni kadrovi; i, treće, koji su razlozi i ciljevi zahtjeva za zabranu SDS-a. Kada optužuje Sfor da nema entuzijazma za hapšenje osumnjièenih za zloèine ili kada konstatuje da RS ne saraðuje sa Tribunalom i da se u njoj o zloèinima i ne govori, Lyon zaboravlja nekoliko stvari. Prije svega, zašto Sfor uopšte treba da hapsi osumnjièene kada u RS-u postoji Vlada, koju stranci, malo je reæi, smatraju prijateljskom i kooperativnom?

Oil trade between Serbia and Croatia in 1991

http://listserv.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0507&L=justwatch-l&D=1&O=D&P=49992
Justwatch
Sense News Agency
18 July 2005

BEING IN GOVERNMENT PAYS, AND PAYS WELL

The other company, Novi privrednik,  was established in 1991 by Mirko
Krajisnik (brother of the accused Momcilo) and Rajko Dukic. The firm was
into "big business and big trade deals," including oil trade, mostly
between Serbia and Croatia, whose economic relations had been severed
because of the war. The party, as Neskovic explained, had nothing to do
with Novi privrednik, but as far as he knew, "Momcilo Krajisnik was
very close to that company."

Liquidation of Directors in the Republic of Srpska by Tijana Tadic (AIM) Sept., 2000

http://www.aimpress.ch/dyn/trae/archive/data/200009/00911-002-trae-sar.htm
MON, 11 SEP 2000 00:40:52 GMT

Liquidation of Directors in the Republic of Srpska

AIM Banja Luka, September 5, 2000
At the moment when Mirko Asanin, newly appointed General Manager of the RS "Elektroprivreda" (Electric-Power Generation and Distribution Industry), complained to the people via TV how, through no fault of his, a journalist had beaten him up, the burlesque about parties, directors and the media in RS reached its climax. All previous and latter open correspondence between Milorad Dodik, Petar Djokic, Rajko Dukic, Zivko Radisic and the mentioned Asanin are but replicas of the old story about pre-election liquidation of directors.
Through Dodik's Government, Dodik's Social-Democrats are doing exactly the same thing that SDS had done during its one-party rule, the only difference being that today's RS political scene no longer belongs to one party.
Dodik's boys have respectable opponents, primarily in the SDS, which has already been through all that, but which now operates in an amazing symbiosis with the one time Dodik's coalition partners - the Socialists. Thus, multi-partyism has introduced yet another quality: replacements of directors are now seasoned with excesses and public disclosure of dirty laundry, again for pre-election purposes.
The only problem is that people, with normal cultural and hygienic habits, generally feel sick at the mere sight of dirty laundry, especially other people's laundry. But, since the domestic politician are not excessively queasy, the show goes on. The ongoing and still unfinished saga about the replacement of directors in RS dates back to the times when Socialists abandoned the ruling coalition Sloga (Harmony), i.e. denied obedience to the Socialist Dodik. Those who realised on time what could be the consequences of such kind of disloyalty for directors and officials, formed a new Democratic Socialist Party.
Already several months ago, the Director of the Serbian Posts, Milutin Pejic, was among the first of old Radisic's Socialists to be called on the carpet. After Pejic's dismissal ensued a seeming lull, long enough for the cards to be shuffled in Governing and Supervisory Boards of state enterprises, after which the liquidation continued. In Bijeljina, Cvijetin Nikic, local folk star and SDS leader was removed from his position as Director of the Semberska Bank, which was yet another confirmation that SDS and the Socialists have definitely formed a coalition against Dodik and the Sloga members who had joined him. After this, another ten unsuitable directors of smaller state enterprises and institutions in the largest city of Semberija were removed, mostly according to the well-known party quotas. However, this was just an introduction into some major investments.
Next was the RS "Elektroprivreda" (EP) where the liquidation started from the very top. After replacements carried out in the Electrical Power Industry's Management and Supervisory Boards, the Government also removed this firm's General Manager. The dethroned EP General Manager Slobodan Mrdic warned that the next would be managers of firms EP dependants: Thermo-Electric Power Plants and Hydro-Electric Power Plants. The fact that some time ago, Rajko Dukic, Director of "Bauxite" from Milic and President of the EP RS Management Board, attacked his former friend Bora Bosic in the media, trying to prove that he was a thief and tax evader, clearly shows that unless Dodik's Government falls soon, Bosic will lose his post as a director. Although Rajko Dukic is not a member of any party, he is probably the most famous Serbian sympathiser who is, incidentally, always on good terms with those in power, so that in this case his stands can serve as the best indicator as to which way the wind is blowing.
The example of the Serbian Posts showed that replacements are no longer carried out in total silence, as was the case during the SDS's absolute rule. As a reaction to the replacement of General Manager workers called a strike. Political manipulation is the only explanation for this incredible phenomenon that workers on strike state that they are satisfied with salaries and working conditions, but at the same time demand things which have nothing to do with workers' interests. On the other hand, in his well-known style, the Prime Minster publicly stated that strike organisers would be punished as soon as the Director, appointed by the Government, assumes his duty.
In the case of the Electrical Power Industry the battle was wages with different means. First, after changes carried out in the EP Management Board, when it was not difficult to guess that next on the elimination list would be Directors, Petar Djikic sent an open letter to the Prime Minister harshly warning him, in the hardly understandable style of Tito's youth activist, not to carry out his intended plan because that was not in line with the National Assembly conclusions and reminding him that the Government was obliged to inform the Assembly Commission (which is surprisingly headed by an SDS member, Boro Paravac) on all changes under its jurisdiction. He also warned the Prime Minister of the Government's bad standing in the National Assembly.
Dodik replied in a style from which it was not hard to conclude that the greedy Prime Minister didn't care a bit for Assembly Commissions, nor for the Government's position in Parliament for that matter, and that, irrespective of open accusations, he intended to replace the Director of the Electric Power Industry. In this, he did not fail to mention Djokic's style and call his speech an attempt at defending his party comrades. However, Dodik overlooked the fact that it was him who was bringing his party comrades in place of Djokic's men.
Thus, the Socialist Mrdic was relieved of office and Marko Asanin, a SNSD men, appointed the EP Director. However, instead of taking the Director's chair, Asanin appeared before the media to complain that Slobodan Mrdic was refusing to hand over his position. This was followed with Mrdic's statement that he learned of his removal from the papers, that it was illegal, and (in the well-known style "I only recognise the judgement of my party") pointed out that he would leave the chief management position only after he received an order to that effect from the Assembly President Petar Djokic. Incidentally, he also said that the Management Board which had relieved him of duty was illegal and that according to the law Rajko Djukic couldn't be a member, let alone President of this firm's Management Board because he was directly interested in EP's business operations as the Director of "Bauxite", one of major business partners of Electrical Power Industry.
Naturally, Mrdic's objection is up to the point, but it is Interesting that he remember it only now when his position is slipping. Then it was the turn of Rajko Djukic, President of the Management Board, who said that Mrdic was replaced not because he was a Socialist, but because of his poor management of the firm. Mrdic responded that he took very good care of the enterprise because, firstly, the Government had positively assessed business operation of the Electric Power Generation and Distribution Industry and, secondly, DM 180 million worth annual losses were reduced to negligible 80 million during his directorship. In response to all this, Asanin ordered the blocking of the firm's gyro account so as to prevent the man who was falsely presenting himself as the Director from harming the enterprise and the state.
After Asanin's return from Trebinje and his unsuccessful mission of taking over the managerial post, an incident occurred in Srpsko Sarajevo. After he appeared miraculously, probably uninvited, in Radio Srpsko Sarajevo and, to put it neutrally, got into a fight with a journalist of "Srpsko oslobodjenje" (Serbian Liberation), Ljubisa Lazic, Asanin once again used the media to cry on their shoulder. This time he told the Republic of Srpska Television an unbelievable story how, in fact, the journalist had attacked him. It is very unlikely that anyone could believe that the times have come in the Balkans when journalists were attacking officials, let alone physically assault them. This was followed by statements of the Radio Srpsko Sarajevo and "Srpsko oslobodjenje" which explained who was in this story the attacker and who the attacked party.
Trying to get out of the folly he had committed, Asanin made an even bigger one: in his public statement he called Radio Srpsko Sarajevo the nest of drug addicts, accused the journalist Lazic of offending and beating him, without a reason, in a hashish caused attack of madness, offhandedly calling him a petty-gambler. Still, the most morbid thing in this already morbid story, is a syntagm with which Asanin described the Serbian Radical Party calling it a handful of creatures walking the earth. For, it was precisely as a member of that same party that Asanin became a Minister in the first mandate of the Council of Ministers of B&H, and thus started his career as an official. His statement makes it perfectly clear that, although he had pragmatically changed a party, he kept Ognjen Tadic's style.
In the midst of all these open letters, statements and counter-statement, Zivko Radisic's famous press conference was organised. He tried to get his revenge on his former coalition partners, for the replacement of his party colleagues from managerial posts, with a story about coffee trailers. He informed the public that a private company "Dena", which was licensed for consignment storage of 120 trailers of coffee, was registered on the basis of a forged identity card and that, according to the given address, it was located in the building of the Banjaluka Music School. On the other hand, according to a decision of the Customs Administration, authorised personnel came to the location and confirmed on the spot that both the enterprise and warehouse were there. Since coffee is not usually stored in music schools, which incidentally has barely enough space to accommodate all pupils and instruments, it is clear that this was Customs' shameless deception and a major plunder of the state by which, after all, all RS citizens have been robbed for a still undetermined number of millions. The point is that the Customs Administration is controlled by Nebojsa Radmanovic's Socialists, loyal to Dodik, and the question is whether Zivko Radisic knew about all this while his party comrade was the first man of the Customs Administration.
However, it is interesting that next to the Music School, at the same address, is a house of the Director of the Republican Customs Administration, Dragoljub Trivanovic. For the time being, only the tabloid PRST carried this news. Cynics comment that even PRST sometimes publishes truth, especially when it is in the SDS's interest.
Tijana Tadic

(AIM) 

Stephen Margetts; Milici; Rajko Dukic

ICTY transcripts in the case number IT-00-39-T, the Prosecutor v. Momcilo Krajisnik (on the authenticity of the document provided by Rajko Dukic) 


Page 20972
1 Thursday, 9 March 2006
2 [Open session]
3 [The accused entered court]
4 --- Upon commencing at commence 2.33 p.m.
5 JUDGE ORIE: Good afternoon to everyone.
6 Mr. Registrar, would you please call the case.
7 THE REGISTRAR: Good afternoon, Your Honour. This is case number
8 IT-00-39-T, the Prosecutor versus Momcilo Krajisnik.
9 JUDGE ORIE: Thank you, Mr. Registrar.
10 Mr. Josse, I think there are two items on the agenda before we
11 continue with the examination-in-chief of Mr. Poplasen. The first,
12 although I do not know any details, is that there was a translation
13 issue.
14 MR. JOSSE: If I could deal with that first, please, Your Honour.
15 JUDGE ORIE: Yes, please do so.
16 MR. JOSSE: I sent an e-mail to offices of the Chamber this
17 morning. I asked them not to send it to the Judges because --
18 JUDGE ORIE: No, we have not -- I do understand that you have
19 provided an alternative translation. I have been informed that there was
20 an issue of translation and that the Defence considered an alternative
21 translation better, but I haven't seen it.
22 MR. JOSSE: Simply because I wanted the agreement of my learned
23 friends.
24 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
25 MR. JOSSE: I think we've agreed this much -- I can hand it up,
Page 20973
1 although they haven't as yet agreed or commented upon the translation I'm
2 about to hand up. It's short. It relates to Article 3 of the decision
3 that we spent a lot of time on yesterday, so I've got plenty of copies
4 here.
5 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
6 Madam Usher, could you please assist Mr. Josse.
7 Mr. Harmon.
8 MR. HARMON: Your Honour, I can tell you our position on this. We
9 have received communications from the Defence in respect to this proposed
10 re-translation. We have some issues with it. We will -- we have shown it
11 to our language assistants. We will be in touch with the Defence and we
12 will see if we can find a resolution as to an agreed-upon translation.
13 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
14 Yes, I see that there are some differences. I notice that "war
15 commissioner" now reads "war delegation."
16 MR. JOSSE: It's nuance, Your Honour, rather than --
17 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
18 MR. JOSSE: -- markedly different.
19 JUDGE ORIE: Yes. I suggest that -- of course, if the parties
20 would agree on the translation, the Chamber, if it comes down to
21 translations, would not fully rely on an agreement between the parties,
22 because the Chamber would like to have this checked through the services
23 of the CLSS. But if the parties would agree on what would be the most
24 appropriate translation, we could send that for review to the CLSS and see
25 -- see what the final result will be. When do the parties think they
Page 20974
1 could agree on ... Because the witness is now here, I would rather not
2 wait for ages.
3 MR. HARMON: Perhaps we can submit this issue on Monday, Your
4 Honour.
5 JUDGE ORIE: Yes, but then I would -- I would first --
6 [Trial Chamber confers]
7 JUDGE ORIE: As I said, it's fine if the parties agree on this,
8 but that's not the most important matter. I will ask CLSS whether they
9 could compare the translation suggested by the Defence team with the
10 translation as has been provided and to give whatever comment they'd like
11 to give, if that would be possible. We're talking about six or seven
12 lines. I take it that there must be a possibility that someone reviews
13 these seven lines, because it's only Article 3, from what I understand,
14 Mr. Josse.
15 MR. JOSSE: It is.
16 JUDGE ORIE: Yes. Then I don't know -- Mr. Registrar, perhaps you
17 could assist us in making already contact because it's not a -- I don't
18 know exactly how you divide your work, the -- those who are translating
19 written text I think is a different group from those who are assisting us
20 during the -- during the hearings.
21 Mr. Registrar, may I take it that you give these three -- we are
22 talking about a B/C/S original, the translation provided by the
23 Prosecution, and the alternative translation suggested by the Defence,
24 that it will be in the hands of the CLSS and that we hear as soon as
25 possible.
Page 20975
1 MR. HARMON: Your Honour.
2 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
3 MR. HARMON: I'm sorry, this -- this is a document that was used
4 yesterday, was it, with the witness?
5 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
6 MR. HARMON: Then I would not have suggested Monday because I was
7 not privy to the discussions with Mr. Josse about this. I thought this
8 was something that didn't have such an urgent nature. If I had known, I
9 would not have made that suggestion.
10 JUDGE ORIE: Yes, well, of course you have the material there as
11 well. So if everyone works on it, these seven lines, we would know as
12 soon as possible what would be the most reliable translation, and it still
13 is language, and translation is a complex matter, as we are aware of.
14 Then the next issue was, Mr. Josse, you asked for five minutes to
15 orally argue the admissibility of the Savkic exhibits.
16 MR. JOSSE: Your Honour, thank you. Could I, before my five
17 minutes begin, deal with the issue of provenance, because quite a lot has
18 happened about that since the last occasion the matter was aired in court.
19 As the Court is aware, Mr. Margetts sent an e-mail first to the
20 Defence and then to the Chamber, detailing the provenance of all these
21 documents. Having considered the matter, the Defence accept what is
22 contained within that e-mail; however, the issue so far as P1055 and P1056
23 is concerned remains slightly unresolved. And in the course of the last
24 24 hours - indeed it may actually only be today, to be fair - I have made
25 some further inquiries of Mr. Margetts because, Your Honour, the position
Page 20976
1 is that 1055, that was the first document that I objected to, that was the
2 one that the witness said was a forgery. It transpires that apparently it
3 was obtained from the archives of the Boksit company in Milici. Well,
4 unsurprisingly, that was of some real interest to the Defence, bearing in
5 mind what the witness was saying and bearing in mind how the witness --
6 the issue of forgery. So some further inquiries have been made and I
7 would invite Mr. Margetts to inform the Chamber about them and then
8 perhaps we could see how they can be entered effectively into the
9 evidence, because the Defence want these matters as part of the evidence.
10 JUDGE ORIE: Yes, I do understand. There was the document where
11 the witness testified, I think, that it was in the interest of the Boksit
12 company to have something on paper --
13 MR. JOSSE: Precisely. And in re-examination I asked him who it
14 was who forged them and he basically said it was Serbs within that
15 organisation, that's who he guessed had been responsible for it.
16 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
17 MR. JOSSE: But perhaps Mr. Margetts could give the extra
18 information because, as I say, I'm very anxious that that be on the
19 record.
20 JUDGE ORIE: Yes.
21 MR. MARGETTS: Yes, Your Honours, first of all in regard to the
22 provenance and the e-mail we sent of 23 February, and it was subsequently
23 forwarded to the Trial Chamber, this is how we described the provenance of
24 that document: It was part of a group of documents delivered to the
25 Office of the Prosecutor on the 29th of October, 2002, by the liaison
Page 20977
1 officer of the Republika Srpska government, Mr. Trifun Jovicic, and he
2 informed the OTP that the documents were obtained from the archives of the
3 Boksit company in Milici.
4 My learned friend made some further inquiries and asked whether we
5 could provide some further information in relation to that. We did so
6 today, an e-mail to my learned friend, and this is the information we
7 provided: The provision of these documents and a number of other
8 documents to the OTP arose from an interview that was conducted with
9 Mr. Rajko Dukic in Belgrade on the 1st of September, 2002. I - referring
10 to myself, Stephen Margetts - participated in that interview. And during
11 the course of that interview, Rajko Dukic undertook to provide documents
12 related to paragraph 2 of Exhibit P52 to us. And Your Honours will recall
13 Exhibit P52; it's the facsimile dated 15th December, 1992, sent to
14 Mr. Krajisnik and addressed to Mr. Karadzic. And in paragraph 2, it
15 refers to approximately a little bit more than 3 million Deutschmarks aid
16 provided to Republika Srpska, and it refers to the characterisation of
17 that as a tax liability. So that's the further information that we've
18 provided.
19 MR. JOSSE: Could I just add this: I then asked Mr. Margetts this
20 question in writing: "Are you saying that Dukic provided these documents
21 to Jovicic?" And he provided with the answer: "Correct."
22 MR. MARGETTS: Yes, Your Honour, I can confirm that that's
23 correct.
24 MR. JOSSE: And though I have said to Mr. Margetts that I invite
25 the Prosecution to make further inquiries, I think for the purpose of this
Page 20978
1 argument that isn't necessary. It's quite clear to the Chamber that the
2 Prosecution accept that it was Mr. Dukic himself who provided them to the
3 liaison officer, who then passed them on to the Office of the Prosecutor.
4 Your Honour, these are my submissions:
5 The issue of these documents raises, in our submission, a number
6 of interesting and important questions. Could I begin by endorsing, in
7 effect, what Your Honour put to Mr. Margetts in the course of argument on
8 the 23rd of February, when, at page 20816 of the transcript, Your Honour
9 in effect said insofar as a forgery is concerned, and this related to
10 P1055: "Does a forgery -- if it's true that it's a forgery, this document
11 could well be understood as corroborating the witness's evidence that the
12 Crisis Staff never existed because documents that are produced are
13 forgeries. If, however, it very much depends on whether it's a forgery,
14 yes or no. If it's a forgery, then it might support the witness's views.
15 If not, well, it's likely to corroborate the Prosecution's view."
16 And then a moment later Your Honour said: "But is it for the
17 witness to demonstrate that it's a forgery or is it for the Prosecution to
18 demonstrate that it's an authentic document?"
19 Well, Your Honour, the Defence say that it's for the Prosecution
20 to prove that it's not a forgery and to prove that beyond a reasonable
21 doubt. And it's important to do things in the correct order because
22 clearly that is of some relevance. So far as Mr. Margetts's submissions
23 that then followed on the 23rd of February are concerned, we contend that
24 they were ostensibly misconceived. He classically put the cart before the
25 horse. In effect, so far as virtually, if not every document, he invites
Page 20979
1 admission of the document on the basis that the Trial Chamber can conclude
2 that the witness is lying. This is not a helpful approach, in our
3 submission, because it can't be proper or helpful for a party objecting to
4 the admissibility of their document from the other party to make a long
5 speech commenting on why the witness is not telling the truth. In
6 passing, we contend, that it's slightly surprising that the Trial Chamber
7 didn't stop Mr. Margetts.
8 Having said that, what it does mean is that if Mr. Margetts's
9 approach is correct, the basis of admission would necessarily entail, in
10 relation to any document objected, the Trial Chamber making all sorts of
11 findings about the witness, firstly, before deciding if the document
12 should be admitted into evidence at all; and secondly, of course, before
13 the end of the case and before hearing all of the evidence.
14 So Mr. Margetts's approach is fundamentally flawed, in our

15 submission.